Thursday, August 18, 2011

Food Palatability and Body Fatness: Clues from Alliesthesia

Part I: Is there a Ponderostat?

Some of the most important experiments for understanding the role of food palatability/reward in body fatness were performed by Dr. Michel Cabanac and collaborators in the 1970s (hat tip to Dr. Seth Roberts for the references).  In my recent food reward series (1), I referenced but did not discuss Dr. Cabanac's work because I felt it would have taken too long to describe.  However, I included two of his studies in my Ancestral Health Symposium talk, and I think they're worth discussing in more detail here.

Read more »

Monday, August 15, 2011

I Got Boinged, and Other News

The reaction to my post "The Carbohydrate Hypothesis of Obesity: a Critical Examination" has been overwhelmingly positive, particularly among the scientists I've heard from. 

On Saturday, the inimitable maker and writer Mark Frauenfelder posted a link to my post on the variety blog BoingBoing.  BoingBoing has been on my sidebar for three years, and it's the place I go when I need a break.  It's a fun assortment of science, news, technology and entertainment.  BoingBoing was originally a zine started by Frauenfelder and his wife in 1988, and it has been on the web since 1995.  Today, it has multiple contributing authors and it draws several hundred thousand hits per day.  I'm thrilled that Frauenfelder posted my article there.  Apparently he likes my blog.  Thanks!

I added a new section (IIB) to my original post.  It discusses what human genetics can teach us about the mechanisms of common obesity.  It is consistent with the rest of the evidence suggesting that body fatness is primarily regulated by the brain, not by fat tissue, and that leptin signaling plays a dominant role in this process. 

Friday, August 12, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals



1. Koshikari Echigo



2. Echigo Stout



3. Echigo Red Ale





cheers,



dave hauslein

beer manager

415-255-0610







We just received our first shipment of Ale Industries Rye'd Piper! Great stuff. Pick some up while it's nice and fresh!



cheers,



dave hauslein

beer manager

415-255-0610





Thursday, August 11, 2011

The Carbohydrate Hypothesis of Obesity: a Critical Examination

Introduction

I'd like to begin by emphasizing that carbohydrate restriction has helped many people lose body fat and improve their metabolic health.  Although it doesn't work for everyone, there is no doubt that carbohydrate restriction causes fat loss in many, perhaps even most obese people.  For a subset of people, the results can be very impressive.  I consider that to be a fact at this point, but that's not what I'll be discussing here. 

What I want to discuss is a hypothesis.  It's the idea, championed by Gary Taubes, that carbohydrate (particularly refined carbohydrate) is the primary cause of common obesity due to its ability to elevate insulin, thereby causing increased fat storage in fat cells.  To demonstrate that I'm representing this hypothesis accurately, here is a quote from his book Good Calories, Bad Calories:

Read more »

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals





1, De Molen Pek & Veren



2. De Molen SSS Pattinson London Porter



3. Hitachino Nest Ancient Nipponia



4. Cuvee Du Jonquilles Biere De Garde





cheers,



dave hauslein

beer manager

415-255-0610





Monday, August 8, 2011

Ancestral Health Symposium

Last weekend I attended the Ancestral Health Symposium at the University of California, Los Angeles, organized by Aaron Blaisdell, Brent Pottenger and Seth Roberts with help from many others.  It was a really great experience and I'm grateful to have been invited.  I was finally able to meet many of the people who I respect and admire, but knew only through the internet.  I'm not going to make a list because it would be too long, but if you take a look at the symposium schedule, I think you'll understand where I'm coming from.  I was also able to connect with a number of Whole Health Source readers, which was great.  I recognized some of them from the comments section.  Now I know it wasn't just my mom with 57 Google accounts.

The symposium was the first of its kind, and represented many facets of the ancestral health community, including "Paleolithic" diet and exercise patterns, low-carbohydrate diets, Weston Price-style diets, traditional health-nutrition researchers as well as other camps.  For the most part they coexisted peacefully and perhaps even learned a thing or two from one another. 

I was very impressed by the appearance of the attendees.  Young men and women were fit with glowing skin, and older attendees were energetic and aging gracefully.  It would be hard to come up with a better advertisement for ancestrally-oriented diets and lifestyles.  I saw a lot of people taking the stairs rather than the elevator.  I like to say I'll take the elevator/escalator when I'm dead.  I think integrating exercise into everyday life is healthy and efficient.  Escalators and elevators of course make sense for people with physical disabilities or heavy suitcases.

The first talk was by Dr. Boyd Eaton, considered by many to be the grandfather of the paleolithic diet concept.  I was very impressed by his composure, humility and compassionate attitude.  Half his talk was dedicated to environmental and social problems.  Dr. Staffan Lindeberg gave a talk titled "Food and Western Disease", which covered his paleolithic diet clinical trials as well as other evidence supporting ancestral diets.  I like Dr. Lindeberg's humble and skeptical style of reasoning.  I had the great pleasure of having dinner with Dr. Lindeberg and his wife, Dr. Eaton, Pedro Bastos, Dr. Lynda Frassetto, Dr. Guy-Andre Pelouze and his son Alexandre.  Pedro gave a very nice talk on the complexities of traditional and modern dairy.  The following night, I was able to connect with other writers I enjoy, including Chris Masterjohn, Melissa McEwen, John Durant, and Denise Minger

Dr. Pelouze is a french cardiovascular surgeon who strongly supports the food reward/palatability concept of obesity.  We had a conversation the evening before the conference, during which he basically made the same points I was going to make in my talk.  He is particularly familiar with the research of Dr. Michel Cabanac, who is central to the food reward idea.  He eats an interesting diet: mostly raw, omnivorous, and extremely simple.  If I understood correctly, he mostly eats raw meat, fish, fruit and vegetables with little or no preparation.  He sometimes cooks food if he wants to, but most of it is raw.  He believes simple, raw food allows the body's satiety systems to work more effectively.  He has been eating this way for more than twenty years, and his son was raised this way and is now about my age (if I recall correctly, Alexandre has a masters and is studying for an MD, and ultimately wants to become an MD/PhD).  Both of them look very good, are full of energy and have a remarkably positive mental state.  Alexandre told me that he never felt deprived growing up around other children who ate pastries, candy et cetera.  They woke up early and ran six miles before the conference began at 8 am. 

I gave my talk on Friday.  Giving a talk is not like writing a blog post-- it has to be much more cohesive and visually compelling.  I put a lot of work into it and it went really well.  Besides the heat I got from from Gary Taubes in the question and answer session, the response was very positive.  The talk, including the questions, will be freely available on the internet soon, as well as other talks from the symposium.  Some of it will be familiar to people who have read my body fat setpoint and food reward series, but it's a concise summary of the ideas and parts of it are new, so it will definitely be worthwhile to watch it.  

We have entered a new era of media communication.  Every time someone sneezed, it was live tweeted.  There are some good aspects to it-- it democratizes information by making it more accessible.  On the other hand, it's sometimes low quality information that contains inaccurate accounts and quotes that are subsequently recirculated. 

It was a great conference and I hope it was the first of many.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals

1. Midnight Sun Meltdown DIPA

2. Midnight Sun Mayhem DIPA

3. De Dolle Dulle Teve

4. Struise Elliot Brew

5. Struise Svea IPA

6. Ridgeway Oxfordshire Blue

7. Thornbridge Hall St. Petersburg Russian Imperial Stout

8. De Molen Hel & Verdoemenis

9. Ducato Verdi Imperial Stout

10. Ducato L'Ultima Luna Vintage 2009

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. Sierra/Dogfish Life & Limb Batch 2

2. Scaldis Blonde Tripel

3. Scaldis 75th Anniversary Refermentee

4. Bieken Honey Ale

5. Drake's Denogginizer and Expedition 22oz bottles

6. Bruery Batch #300

7. Theakston XB ESB

8. Fuller's London Pride

9. Fuller's ESB

10. Fuller's Pint Glasses

11. Deschutes/Boulevard Collaboration: Conflux #2


cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Friday, July 29, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals



1. Allagash Fluxus 2011

2. Stone/Troegs/Jason Fields/Kevin Sheppard Collaboration: Cherry Chocolate Stout

3. Stone/Baird/Ishii Collaboration: Japanese Green Tea IPA

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Thursday, July 28, 2011

HWC Presents: Market to Table at York's Central Market!

**UPDATE**
If you're coming to Saturday's "Market to Table" Fundraiser, please enter Central Market through the W. Philadelphia St. entrance.  See you on Saturday!

We've got some great silent auction items up for bid thanks to our wonderful downtown partners! Here is a sample of what you could take home:

  • Chef's Brunch for 12 in your home by Chef Sean Arnold

  • LeAnn Rimes Tickets at the Pullo Center

  • "Groundskeeper for a Day" VIP Package from York Revolution

  • Package of 10 art lessons from Brenda Wintermyer

  • Photography Package courtesy Ken Bruggeman Photography

  • Private Winery Tour and Tasting from Allegro Vineyards

...and much, much more...
items from Sweet Melissa's Dream, Kimman's, Sunrise Soap Co., Nuts About Granola, JR's Fries, Outside the Cake Box, Central Market...there's something for everyone!


Join Healthy World Cafe at our Market to Table Fundraiser at York's Central Market House.  Join Chef and Guiding Committee Chair Sean Arnold and HWC members and volunteers as we celebrate the bounty of fresh, locally available food.  A festive evening of food and drink will celebrate local farmers and markets, local music and art, and a silent auction of fabulous items donated by local businesses and HWC supporters.  Art will be provided by RAW: Realizing Artistic Worth.  We'll have a few surprises as well!

Market to Table is Saturday, August 20, 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m., at Central Market, W. Philadelphia St. side.  Suggested donation is $40 per person and tickets are available online (see the ticket sales box to the right - here on our website).  Tickets will also be available at the door.

Come one, come all, enjoy an evening downtown, and most of all, come to support Healthy World Cafe!

Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Dietary Guidelines for Americans, My Way

I just saw this on BoingBoing.  Simple but true. 


This image was created by Adam Fields

The people who design government dietary guidelines are gagged by the fact that politics and business are so tightly intertwined in this country.  Their advice will never directly target the primary source of obesity and metabolic dysfunction-- industrially processed food-- because that would hurt corporate profits in one of the country's biggest economic sectors.  You can only squeeze so much profit out of a carrot, so food engineers design "value-added" ultrapalatable/rewarding foods with a larger profit margin.

We don't even have the political will to regulate food advertisements directed at defenseless children, which are systematically training them from an early age to prefer foods that are fattening and unhealthy.  This is supposedly out of a "free market" spirit, but that justification is hollow because processed food manufacturers benefit from tax loopholes and major government subsidies, including programs supporting grain production and the employment of disadvantaged citizens (see Fast Food Nation).

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Interview on Super Human Radio

Today, I did an audio interview with Carl Lanore of Super Human Radio.  Carl seems like a sharp guy who focuses on physical fitness, nutrition, health and aging.  We talked mostly about food reward and body fatness-- I think it went well.  Carl went from obese to fit, and his fat loss experience lines up well with the food reward concept.  As he was losing fat rapidly, he told friends that he had "divorced from flavor", eating plain chicken, sweet potatoes and oatmeal, yet he grew to enjoy simple food over time.

The interview is here.  It also includes an interview of Dr. Matthew Andry about Dr. Loren Cordain's position on dairy; my interview starts at about 57 minutes.  Just to warn you, the website and podcast are both full of ads.

Monday, July 25, 2011

New Letter of Support ! Thank You Pullo Center!

Thursday, July 21, 2011

New Arrivals: Fantome Magic Ghost, La Dalmatienne, Anchorage Whiteout Wit and more!


Hey all,
Got some kick ass new stuff in today. Check these out:
-Anchorage Brewing Whiteout Wit
-Fantome Magic Ghost
-Fantome Dark White
-Fantome La Dalmatienne
-Bruery Batch 300 Oak Aged Tripel
-Dogfish Head Theobroma
-Brewdog Dogma
-High Water Pom Cherry Bomb
-North Coast Grand Cru (Bourbon Barrel Aged w/Agave)
cheers,
dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Wednesday, July 20, 2011

Weight Gain and Weight Loss in a Traditional African Society

The Massas is an ethnic group in Northern Cameroon that subsists mostly on plain sorghum loaves and porridge, along with a small amount of milk, fish and vegetables (1, 2).  They have a peculiar tradition called Guru Walla that is only undertaken by men (2, 1):
Read more »

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals

1. Bruery Cuir is back in stock!

2. Just recieved three new gluten free beers!

-Estrella Damm "Daura" in 4 packs
-Greens Gluten Free Amber
-Greens Gluten Free Dubbel

More new stuff coming in by the end of the week.


cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Healthy Spirits: STAMPT promotion



We just started a new promotion with STAMPT. Download the free STAMPT app on your phone to take advantage of deals offered at the shop. Our current deal is:

BUY 5 TRAPPIST BEERS, GET ONE GLASS FREE.

It works like a coffee shop stamp card. Every time you come into the store and buy a trappist beer, you pull out your phone and we scan a barcode. This gives you a stamp. When you get 5 stamps, you get the glass.

The beers eligible for this deal are:

-Rochefort
-Chimay
-Westmalle
-Orval
-La Trappe (Koningshoven)
-Achel

If you have any further questions about stampt, check out www.stampt.com.

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610


Friday, July 15, 2011

Healthy Spirits: Small allocation of Parabola

We unexpectedly received one more case of Parabola. Limit 1 bottle per customer. They'll be behind the counter, available by request only. Beer Club members may have bottles held for them. Please make reservations BY PHONE ONLY. This is the only way to guarantee your reservation.

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals

1. Fantome Magic Ghost

2. Mikkeller Barrel Aged Black Hole Series
-Bourbon
-Tequila
-Peat Whiskey
-Red Wine
-White Wine
-Cognac
Buy all 6 and get 10% OFF!

3. Haandbryggeriet Haandbakk

4. Dieu Du Ciel! Derniere Volante

5. De Molen Cease & Desist (formerly known as Rasputin)


cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610



Thursday, July 14, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. Cascade Kriek 2010

2. Mikkeller/Stillwater "Our Side"

3. Alesmith "Yulesmith" Summer 2011

4. Alesmith Horny Devil

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Simple Food: Thoughts on Practicality

Some people have reacted negatively to the idea of a reduced-reward diet because it strikes them as difficult or unsustainable.  In this post, I'll discuss my thoughts on the practicality and sustainability of this way of eating.  I've also thrown in a few philosophical points about reward and the modern world.
Read more »

Saturday, July 9, 2011

How Does Gastric Bypass Surgery Cause Fat Loss?

Gastric bypass surgery is an operation that causes food to bypass part of the digestive tract.  In the most common surgery, Roux-en-Y bypass, stomach size is reduced and a portion of the upper small intestine is bypassed.  This means that food skips most of the stomach and the duodenum (upper small intestine), passing from the tiny stomach directly into the jejunum (a lower part of the upper small intestine)*.  It looks something like this:
Read more »

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals/Fat Angel+Almanac Event


First, the new stuff.

1. Drie Fonteinen Doesjel Vintage 2006 (very limited supply)

2. Pretty Thing Field Mouse's Farewell

-------------------------------------

Just wanted to give a final reminder about our event with Almanac Brewery at Fat Angel tonight. It will go from 6 to 10, and we will be selling bottles and glassware. The beer will also be on draft (one of only a few kegs produced) and the Almanac guys will be selling shirts. Fat Angel will be serving their regular menu, with $2 off flatbreads. Fat Angel is on O'Farrell Street, between Fillmore and Steiner. We hope to see you there!

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

HWC brings "Market to Table" Series to York's Central Market

On July 9, Healthy World Cafe's Guiding Committee Chair Sean Arnold teamed up with other volunteers to demonstrate three recipes featuring fresh zucchini and squash at the Rojahn Performance Kitchen inside York's Central Market House.  Thanks to all who stopped by.  We will have a second performance on July 23.
Chef Sean Arnold and Guiding Committee Member Patricia Fonzi

Fresh, local, in-season ingredients.
Well, lemons aren't local, but we bought them locally.

The July 23 performance will feature locally grown fruits in season.  Recipes will be available at the events and posted to the HWC Facebook page.

The demonstrations will take place each Saturday, from 10 a.m. until Noon, at the Rojahn Performance Kitchen, inside Central Market.  The performances are free and open to all.

Sean is a graduate of Elon College and the Culinary Institute of America.  He takes inspiration from whatever he finds available from local farmers and the farm markets.

Plans are coming together for Healthy World Cafe's first "pop-up" restaurant.  We will open for the evening of August 20, at Central Market House.  Food will be prepared in the YorKitchen, and served in the seating area on the W. Philadelphia St. side of the market house.  Dinner selections will also feature the "Market to Table" theme.  Local art, music, food, and of course, friends of HWC will fill the space and add to the excitement.  Watch our website for more information on this event and how you can be a part of it!

Don't forget to follow us on Twitter and "like" us on Facebook.  See you at Market!

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. Swan Lake Samourai Barley Ale (Japanese Barley Wine)

2. Sierra Nevada Ovila Saison

3. Sierra Nevada Summerfest

4. Ballast Point Sculpin 6-packs

5. Magic Hat #9

6. Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA

7. Coney Island Barrel Aged Human Blockhead (Buffalo Trace Barrel Aged Doppelbock)

8. Green Flash Hop Head Red 4 Packs

9. Green Flash West Coast IPA 4 Packs

10. Unibroue Quelque Chose

11. Telegraph Reserve Wheat Ale

12. New Glassware from St. Louis, Kasteel, Delerium and Duchesse De Bourgogne

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

Liposuction and Fat Regain

If body fat really is actively regulated by the body, rather than just being a passive result of voluntary food intake and exercise behaviors, then liposuction shouldn't be very effective at reducing total fat mass in the long run.  People should return to their body fat "setpoint" rather than remaining at a lower fat mass. 

Teri L. Hernandez and colleagues recently performed the first ever randomized liposuction study to answer this question (1).  Participants were randomly selected to either receive liposuction, or not.  They were all instructed not to make any lifestyle changes for the duration of the study, and body fatness was measured at 6 weeks, 6 months and one year by DXA. 

At 6 weeks, the liposuction group was significantly leaner than the control group.  At 6 months, the difference between the two groups had decreased.  At one year, it had decreased further and the difference between the groups was no longer statistically significant.  Furthermore, the liposuction group regained fat disproportionately in the abdominal area (belly), which is more dangerous than where it was before. The investigators stated:
We conclude that [body fat] is not only restored to baseline levels in nonobese women after small-volume liposuction, but is redistributed abdominally.
This is consistent with animal studies showing that when you surgically remove fat, total fat mass "catches up" to animals that had no fat removed (2).  Fat mass is too important to be left up to chance.  That's why the body regulates it, and that's why any satisfying resolution of obesity must address that regulatory mechanism.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

Food Reward: a Dominant Factor in Obesity, Part VIII

Further reading

I didn't come up with the idea that excessive food reward increases calorie intake and can lead to obesity, far from it.  The idea has been floating around the scientific literature for decades.  In 1976, after conducting an interesting diet study in humans, Dr. Michel Cabanac stated that the "palatability of the diet influences the set point of the ponderostat [system that regulates body fatness]" (1).  

Currently there is a growing consensus that food reward/palatability is a major contributor to obesity. This is reflected by the proliferation of review articles appearing in high-profile journals.  For the scientists in the audience who want more detail than I provide on my blog, here are some of the reviews I've read and enjoyed.  These were written by some of the leading scientists in the study of food reward and hedonics:

Palatability of food and the ponderostat.  Michel Cabanac, 1989.
Food reward, hyperphagia and obesity.  Hans-Rudolf Berthoud et al., 2011.
Reward mechanisms in obesity: new insights and future directions.  Paul J. Kenny, 2011.
Relation of obesity to consummatory and anticipatory food reward.  Eric Stice, 2009.
Hedonic and incentive signals for body weight control.  Emil Egecioglu et al., 2011.
Homeostatic and hedonic signals interact in the control of food intake.  Michael Lutter and Eric J. Nestler, 2009.
Opioids as agents of reward-related feeding: a consideration of the evidence.  Allen S. Levine and Charles J. Billington, 2004.
Central opioids and consumption of sweet tastants: when reward outweighs homeostasis.  Pawel K. Olszewski and Allen S. Levine, 2007.
Oral and postoral determinants of food reward.  Anthony Sclafani, 2004.
Reduced dopaminergic tone in hypothalamic neural circuits: expression of a "thrifty" genotype underlying the metabolic syndrome?  Hanno Pijl, 2003.

If you can read all these papers and still not believe in the food reward hypothesis... you deserve some kind of award.

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Almanac Summer 2010 Hits Shelves!


Hey all,
Almanac Summer 2010 just hit shelves. No bottle limits, so go nuts. Cheers!
Nate

Tastes of York a Success & July's Advisory Group Meeting Info

Healthy World Cafe joined dozens of local farm markets, restaurants, agencies, and foodies at the first annual "Tastes of York" held recently at Spoutwood Farms.  We had an opportunity to meet tons of interesting and interested people, who had a chance to hear about HWC and taste some of our delicious food.  We served Pea Hummus, made from fresh, local peas, and spread the word about our community cafe.

Healthy World's next Advisory Group meeting will be on Tuesday, July 5, due to the Independence Day Holiday.  We will meet at 6:30 p.m. at the Friends Meeting House.  Please join us and bring a friend!


 Even kids loved our Pea Hummus!

Thanks to all who came out, and thanks to Spoutwood Farms!  What a great event.

Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. Brasserie Des Rocs Glassware

2. St. Bernardus Glassware

3. Deschutes Hop in the Dark Black IPA

4. Deschutes Black Butte XXIII

5. Lagunitas Little Sumpin' Wild

6. Speakeasy Betrayal Imperial Red

7. Lagunitas Mason Jar glasses

8. Grand Teton Howling Wolf Hefeweizen

9. Rubicon Hopsauce DIPA

10. La Trappe Oak Aged Isad'or

11. La Trappe Oak Aged Quadruppel

12. De Dolle Bos Keun

13. Pretty Things St. Boltoph's Town Rustic Brown

14. Pretty Things Baby Tree Quadruppel

15. Monschof Schwarzbier

16. Jolly Pumpkin Madrugada Obscura

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Food Reward: a Dominant Factor in Obesity, Part VII

Now that I've explained the importance of food reward to obesity, and you're tired of reading about it, it's time to share my ideas on how to prevent and perhaps reverse fat gain.  First, I want to point out that although food reward is important, it's not the only factor.  Heritable factors (genetics and epigenetics), developmental factors (uterine environment, childhood diet), lifestyle factors (exercise, sleep, stress) and dietary factors besides reward also play a role.  That's why I called this series "a dominant factor in obesity", rather than "the dominant factor in obesity".
Read more »

Thursday, June 23, 2011

Drug Cessation and Weight Gain

Commenter "mem", who has been practicing healthcare for 30+ years, made an interesting remark that I think is relevant to this discussion:
Recovering substance dependent people often put on lots of weight and it is not uncommon for them to become obese or morbidly obese.
This relates to the question that commenter "Gunther Gatherer" and I have been pondering in the comments: can stimulating reward pathways through non-food stimuli influence body fatness?  

It's clear that smoking cigarettes, taking cocaine and certain other pleasure drugs suppress appetite and can prevent weight gain.  These drugs all activate dopamine-dependent reward centers, which is why they're addictive.  Cocaine in particular directly inhibits dopamine clearance from the synapse (neuron-neuron junction), increasing its availability for signaling.
Read more »

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals

1, Bruery 3rd Anniversary: CUIR (oak aged blended old ale made using the Solera method)

2. Bruery Mischief

3. Telegraph Obscura Arborea (oak aged oud bruin with lactobacillus)

4. Pripp's Carnegie Porter

5. 21st Amendment Hop Crisis

6. Anchor Brekle's Brown Ale

7. Rogue Captain Sig's Northwestern Ale

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Saturday, June 18, 2011

Food Reward: a Dominant Factor in Obesity, Part VI

Reward Centers can Modify the Body Fat Setpoint

Dopamine is a neurotransmitter (chemical that signals between neurons) that is a central mediator of reward and motivation in the brain.  It has been known for decades that dopamine injections into the brain suppress food intake, and that this is due primarily to its action in the hypothalamus, which is the main region that regulates body fatness (1).  Dopamine-producing neurons from reward centers contact neurons in the hypothalamus that regulate body fatness (2).  I recently came across a paper by a researcher named Dr. Hanno Pijl, from Leiden University in the Netherlands (3).  The paper is a nice overview of the evidence linking dopamine signaling with body fatness via its effects on the hypothalamus, and I recommend it to any scientists out there who want to read more about the concept.
Read more »

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. Evil Twin YIN (Imperial Stout)

2. Evil Twin YANG (Imperial IPA)

The brewery recommends blending the two beers to make a craft beer Black & Tan!

3. Brasserie De Cazeau "Saison De Cazeau (with elderflower)

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. Stone Belgo Anise Imperial Russian Stout

2. Stone Imperial Russian Stout

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. Nethergate Dirty Dick's Audit Ale

2. Deschutes Twilight Ale

3. New Belgium Lips of Faith Grand Cru

4. Reel Ales Swordfish Cascadian Black IPA

5. Lammsbrau Organic Pilsner

6. Allagash Curieux

7. Allagash Black

8. Victory Summer Love

9. Victory Hop Wallop

10. Tieton Blossom Nectar Cider


cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. 8 Wired "The Big Smoke" Smoked Porter (New Zealand)

2. Mikkeller Beer Geek Breakfast (Bourbon Barrel Aged)

3. Mikkeller Barrel Aged Big Worse Barley Wine (Red Wine Barrel)

4. Coniston Bluebird Bitter

5. Aecht Schlenkerla Helles

6. Fantome Saison

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Friday, June 3, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals


1. Dogfish Head Squall IPA 750ml (in my opinion, this is Dogfish's best hoppy beer)
2. Robert Johnson's Hellhound on my Ale 750ml
3. Sah'Tea 750ml
4. Ballast Point Sculpin 22oz.
cheers,
dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Food Reward: a Dominant Factor in Obesity, Part V

Non-industrial diets from a food reward perspective

In 21st century affluent nations, we have unprecedented control over what food crosses our lips.  We can buy nearly any fruit or vegetable in any season, and a massive processed food industry has sprung up to satisfy (or manufacture) our every craving.  Most people can afford exotic spices and herbs from around the world-- consider that only a hundred years ago, black pepper was a luxury item.  But our degree of control goes even deeper: over the last century, kitchen technology such as electric/gas stoves, refrigerators, microwaves and a variety of other now-indispensable devices have changed the way we prepare food at home (Megan J. Elias.  Food in the United States, 1890-1945). 

To help calibrate our thinking about the role of food reward (and food palatability) in human evolutionary history, I offer a few brief descriptions of contemporary hunter-gatherer and non-industrial agriculturalist diets.  What did they eat, and how did they prepare it? 
Read more »

Healthy Spirits: New Release


We are happy to announce the arrival of Iron Springs's excellent new J.C. Flyer IPA! Come get some.
cheers,
dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Wednesday, June 1, 2011

Healthy Spirits: Shipping Program

Hello Everyone,
We are taking a break from our shipping program while we figure out some details. Thank you for your patience.

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Healthy Spirits: Cantillon (Please Read Carefully)

We just received a VERY LIMITED supply of Cantillon.

1. Gueuze 750ml
2. Rose De Gambrinus 750ml
3. Cuvee Des Champions 750ml

Bottles are LIMIT 1 PER CUSTOMER. Beer Club members may reserve over the phone, but this is one of the rare exceptions when the club discount does not apply. For everyone else, bottles are behind the counter, and will not be stocked on the shelves. They are available by request only.

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Healthy Spirits: Bruery Coton


Just scored another case of this barrel aged old ale from The Bruery. It's on the shelves now. Come and get it!
cheers,
dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Healthy Spirits: FW Parabola (PLEASE READ CAREFULLY)


Hello Everyone,
We just got a very small allocation of Firestone Walker PARABOLA. Bottles are limit 2 per customer, only Beer of the Month Club members may have bottles held for them. Members should make reservations BY PHONE ONLY. This is the only way we can guarantee your reservation. The number is 415-255-0610.
For non members, bottles will be behind the counter and available by request only. You will have to ask for them, as they will not be stocked on the shelves.
I realize these small releases can be frustrating. The bottle limits and by request only policy should help to ensure everyone gets a fair shot at this. Good luck everyone.
cheers,
dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Saturday, May 28, 2011

HWC's Community Garden Plots are in!

Our raised beds have been constructed, dirt and compost delivered, and thanks to our wonderful volunteers, our beds have been planted!  Special thanks to Dave Miller of Miller's Plant Farm, who donated vegetable plants to our effort.  The community gardens are sponsored by York County 4-H/Penn State Cooperative Extension.  Healthy World Cafe's efforts are under the coordination of Robin Pflieger, Advisory Group and Food Subcommittee member.  Thanks to Robin and all of our volunteers.


There will be a ribbon cutting for the Community Garden at 234 S. Pershing Ave., York City, on Tuesday, June 14, at 11:00 a.m.  York City Mayor Kim Bracey will join us in celebration.  Please join us!

Our next Healthy World Cafe Advisory Meeting will be held on Monday, June 6, 6:30 p.m., Friends Meeting House, 135 S. Philadelphia St.  All are welcome to attend.










Thanks to Miller's Plant Farm!

Friday, May 27, 2011

New and In Stock: St. Feuillien and Green Flash Collaboration


New in stock: St. Feuillien and Green Flash Biere De L'Amitie Collaboration Ale
Back in stock: The Bruery Trade Winds and Orchard White, Grand Teton Lost Continent, Allagash Victor and Victoria

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Food Reward: a Dominant Factor in Obesity, Part IV

What is Food Reward?

After reading comments on my recent posts, I realized I need to do a better job of defining the term "food reward".  I'm going to take a moment to do that here.  Reward is a psychology term with a specific definition: "a process that reinforces behavior" (1).  Rewarding food is not the same thing as food that tastes good, although they often occur together. 

Read more »

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Healthy Skeptic Podcast

Chris Kresser has just posted our recent interview/discussion on his blog The Healthy Skeptic.  You can listen to it on Chris's blog here.  The discussion mostly centered around body fat and food reward.  I also answered a few reader questions.  Here are some highlights:
  • How does the food reward system work? Why did it evolve?
  • Why do certain flavors we don’t initially like become appealing over time?
  • How does industrially processed food affect the food reward system?
  • What’s the most effective diet used to make rats obese in a research setting? What does this tell us about human diet and weight regulation?
  • Do we know why highly rewarding food increases the set point in some people but not in others?
  • How does the food reward theory explain the effectiveness of popular fat loss diets?
  • Does the food reward theory tell us anything about why traditional cultures are generally lean?
  • What does cooking temperature have to do with health?
  • Reader question: How does one lose fat?
  • Reader question: What do I (Stephan) eat?
  • Reader question: Why do many people gain fat with age, especially postmenopausal women?
The podcast is a sneak preview of some of the things I'll be discussing in the near future.  Enjoy!

Sunday, May 22, 2011

Fast Food, Weight Gain and Insulin Resistance

CarbSane just posted an interesting new study that fits in nicely with what we're discussing here.  It's part of the US Coronary Artery Risk Development in Young Adults (CARDIA) study, which is a long-term observational study that is publishing many interesting findings.  The new study is titled "Fast-food habits, weight gain, and insulin resistance (the CARDIA study): 15-year prospective analysis" (1).  The results speak for themselves, loud and clear (I've edited some numbers out of the quote for clarity):
Read more »

Saturday, May 21, 2011

Healthy Spirits: High Water Brewing Company



We are very happy to announce the arrival of two new beers from the High Water Brewing Company! We are one of the only two places in the city carrying this beer for the next week or two, so come and get it!






1. Hop Riot IPA






2. Retribution Imperial IPA









cheers,






dave hauslein



beer manager



415-255-0610






Friday, May 20, 2011

END OF THE WORLD SALE!



In celebration of the coming Judgment Day, the following beers are $1 off. This sale is good until May 21 at 11PM, or whenever the sun explodes.


1. Lost Abbey Inferno


2. Lost Abbey Judgment Day


3. Unibroue La Fin Du Monde


4. Midnight Sun Fallen Angel


5. Avery The Beast


6. Avery Mephistopheles


7. Avery Samaels


8. Old Mephisto Barleywine


9. Gudelos Imperial Stout


Hope everyone enjoys the apocalypse!


dave hauslein

beer manager

415-255-0610

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

Food Reward: a Dominant Factor in Obesity, Part III

Low-Fat Diets

In 2000, the International Journal of Obesity published a nice review article of low-fat diet trials.  It included data from 16 controlled trials lasting from 2-12 months and enrolling 1,910 participants (1).  What sets this review apart is it only covered studies that did not include instructions to restrict calorie intake (ad libitum diets).  On average, low-fat dieters reduced their fat intake from 37.7 to 27.5 percent of calories.  Here's what they found:
Read more »

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals

1. Brew Dog Punk IPA 4 packs

2. Anderson Valley Summer Solstice Cans

3. New Belgium "Lips of Faith" Super Cru

4. Uerige Sticke Altbier

5. Yoho Aooni IPA cans (Japan)

6. Yoho Tokyo Black Porter cans (Japan)

7. Yoho Yona Yona Pale Ale cans (Japan)

8. Fullers 1845 Ale

9. St. Peter's India Pale Ale

10. Moosbacher Kellerbier

11. New Hitachino Nest Glassware

12. John Henry 3 Lick Spiker Ale (American Strong Ale aged with bourbon soaked oak chips)

13. Baladin Nora

14. Luficer Glassware

15. Reissdorf Kolsch Glassware

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610





Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Clarifications About Carbohydrate and Insulin

My statements about carbohydrate and insulin in the previous post seem to have kicked up some dust!  Some people are even suggesting I've gone low-fat!  I'm going to take this opportunity to be more specific about my positions.

I do not think that post-meal insulin spikes contribute to obesity, and they may even oppose it. Elevated fasting insulin is a separate issue-- that's a marker of insulin resistance.  It's important not to confuse the two.  Does insulin resistance contribute to obesity?  I don't know, but it's hypothetically possible since insulin acts like leptin's kid brother in some ways.  As far as I can tell, starch per se and post-meal insulin spikes do not lead to insulin resistance.
Read more »

Monday, May 16, 2011

Help kick start HWC's Community Garden Plot

Healthy World Cafe has partnered with York County 4-H and Penn State Cooperative Extension on their Community Garden initiative.  We have four raised garden beds at the community garden located at 234 S. Pershing Ave. in York City.

We need help building beds and planting at the site on Saturday, May 21, between the hours of 9 a.m. - Noon.  If you can help, e-mail us at healthyworldcafe@gmail.com.  Join Us!

There will be a ribbon cutting at the community garden with a dedication from York City Mayor Kim Bracey on June 14, at 11 a.m.  Join Healthy World Cafe and support community gardening in York!

Friday, May 13, 2011

Healthy Skeptic Podcast and Reader Questions

Chris Kresser, Danny Roddy and I just finished recording the podcast that will be released on May 24th.  It went really well, and we think you'll find it informative and maybe even practical!

Unfortunately, we only got around to answering three of the questions I had selected:
  1. How does one lose fat?
  2. What do I (Stephan) eat?
  3. Why do many people gain fat with age, especially postmenopausal women?
I feel guilty about that, so I'm going to answer three more right now.

Read more »

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals

1. Sudwerk Hefeweizen 6-packs

2. Kostritzer Schwarzbier

3. Drake's Expedition Red Ale

4. Rodenbach/Rodenbach Grand Cru glassware

5. Oud Beersel Gueuze, Kriek, and Framboise 12oz.

6. Mission Brewing Hefe and Kolsch

7. Telegraph White Ale

8. Omer glassware

9. Straffe Hendrik Bruges Tripel and Quadruppel

10. Deschutes Hop Henge

11. Alaskan Summer Ale

12. Alaskan Pilot Series Imperial IPA

13. Sierra Nevada Beer Camp Mix 12 pack

14. Sierra Nevada Summerfest

15. Samuel Adams Longshot (Homebrew Competition) Mixed 6 pack

16. Black Diamond Peak XV Imperial Porter with vanilla beans and cacao nibs

17. Grand Teton Lost Continent DIPA 4pk

18. Marin Star Brew Wheatwine

19. Moylans Orange & Black Ale

cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610







Sunday, May 8, 2011

Ask Me a Question

On May 13th, I'll be recording a podcast with Chris Kresser of The Healthy Skeptic. Chris interviewed me about a year ago, and I thought it went well. Chris is a good host and asks interesting questions.

This time around, we're going to do things a bit differently. I'll start with a little overview of my current thoughts on obesity, then we'll answer reader questions. The show is going to be mostly about obesity and related matters, but I may answer a couple of questions that aren't related to obesity if they're especially interesting. There are two ways to leave questions: either in the comments section of this post, or the comments section of Chris's post. The show will air on May 24th.
Read more »

Friday, May 6, 2011

Food Reward: a Dominant Factor in Obesity, Part II

How to Make a Rat Obese

Rodents are an important model organism for the study of human obesity. To study obesity in rodents, you have to make them fat first. There are many ways to do this, from genetic mutations, to brain lesions, to various diets. However, the most rapid and effective way to make a normal (non-mutant, non-lesioned) rodent obese is the "cafeteria diet." The cafeteria diet first appeared in the medical literature in 1976 (1), and was quickly adopted by other investigators. Here's a description from a recent paper (2):

In this model, animals are allowed free access to standard chow and water while concurrently offered highly palatable, energy dense, unhealthy human foods ad libitum.
In other words, they're given an unlimited amount of human junk food in addition to their whole food-based "standard chow." In this particular paper, the junk foods included Froot Loops, Cocoa Puffs, peanut butter cookies, Reese's Pieces, Hostess Blueberry MiniMuffins, Cheez-its, nacho cheese Doritos, hot dogs, cheese, wedding cake, pork rinds, pepperoni slices and other industrial delicacies. Rats exposed to this food almost completely ignored their healthier, more nutritious and less palatable chow, instead gorging on junk food and rapidly attaining an obese state.

Investigators have known for decades that the cafeteria diet is a highly effective way of producing obesity in rodents, but what was interesting about this particular study from my perspective is that it compared the cafeteria diet to three other commonly used rodent diets: 1) standard, unpurified chow; 2) a purified/refined high-fat diet; 3) a purified/refined low-fat diet designed as a comparator for the high-fat diet. All three of these diets were given as homogeneous pellets, and the textures range from hard and fibrous (chow) to soft and oily like cookie dough (high-fat). The low-fat diet contains a lot of sugar, the high-fat diet contains a modest amount of sugar, and the chow diet contains virtually none. The particular high-fat diet in this paper (Research Diets D12451, 45% fat, which is high for a rat) is commonly used to produce obesity in rats, although it's not always very effective. The 60% fat version is more effective.

Consistent with previous findings, rats on every diet consumed the same number of calories over time... except the cafeteria diet-fed rats, which ate 30% more than any of the other groups. Rats on every diet gained fat compared to the unpurified chow group, but the cafeteria diet group gained much more than any of the others. There was no difference in fat gain between the purified high-fat and low-fat diets.

So in this paper, they compared two refined diets with vastly different carb:fat ratios and different sugar contents, and yet neither equaled the cafeteria diet in its ability to increase food intake and cause fat gain. The fat, starch and sugar content of the cafeteria diet was not able to fully explain its effect on fat gain. However, each diets' ability to cause fat gain correlated with its respective food reward qualities. Refined diets high in fat or sugar caused fat gain in rats relative to unpurified chow, but were surpassed by a diet containing a combination of fat, sugar, starch, salt, free glutamate (umami), interesting textures and pleasant and invariant aromas.

Although the cafeteria diet is the most effective at causing obesity in rodents, it's not commonly used because it's a lot more work than feeding pellets, and it introduces a lot of variability into experiments because each rat eats a different combination of foods.

How to Make an Obese H
uman Lean

In 1965, the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences published a very unusual paper (3). Here is the stated goal of the investigators:
The study of food intake in man is fraught with difficulties which result from the enormously complex nature of human eating behavior. In man, in contrast to lower animals, the eating process involves an intricate mixture of physiologic, psychologic, cultural and esthetic considerations. People eat not only to assuage hunger, but because of the enjoyment of the meal ceremony, the pleasures of the palate and often to gratify unconscious needs that are hard to identify. Because of inherent difficulties in studying human food intake in the usual setting, we have attempted to develop a system that would minimize the variables involved and thereby improve the chances of obtaining more reliable and reproducible data.
Here's a photo of their "system":
It's a machine that dispenses bland liquid food through a straw, at the push of a button. They don't give any information on the composition of the liquid diet, beyond remarking that "carbohydrate supplied 50 per cent of the calories, protein 20 per cent and fat 30 per cent. the formula contained vitamins and minerals in amount adequate for daily maintenance."

Volunteers were given access to the machine and allowed to consume as much of the liquid diet as they wanted, but no other food. Since they were in a hospital setting, the investigators could be confident that the volunteers ate nothing else.

The first thing they report is what happened when they fed two lean people using the machine, for 16 or 9 days. Both of them maintained their typical calorie intake (~3,075 and ~4,430 kcal per day) and maintained a very stable weight during this period.

Next, the investigators did the same experiment using two "grossly obese" volunteers. Again, they were asked to "obtain food from the machine whenever hungry." Over the course of the first 18 days, the first (male) volunteer consumed a meager 275 calories per day. The second (female) volunteer consumed a ridiculously low 144 calories per day over the course of 12 days, losing 23 pounds. Without showing data, the investigators remarked that an additional three obese volunteers "showed a similar inhibition of calorie intake when fed by machine."

The first volunteer continued eating bland food from the machine for a total of 70 days, losing approximately 70 pounds. After that, he was sent home with the formula and instructed to drink 400 calories of it per day, which he did for an additional 185 days, after which his total weight loss was 200 lbs. The investigators remarked that "during all this time weight was steadily lost and the patient never complained of hunger or gastrointestinal discomfort." This is truly a starvation-level calorie intake, and to eat it continually for 255 days without hunger suggests that something rather interesting was happening in this man's body.

This machine-feeding regimen was nearly as close as one can get to a diet with no rewarding properties whatsoever. Although it contained carbohydrate and fat, it did not contain any flavor or texture to associate them with, and thus the reward value of the diet was minimized. As one would expect if food reward influences the body fat setpoint, lean volunteers maintained starting weight and a normal calorie intake, while their obese counterparts rapidly lost a massive amount of fat and reduced calorie intake dramatically without hunger. This suggests that obesity is not entirely due to a "broken" metabolism (although that may still contribute), but also at least in part to a heightened sensitivity to food reward in susceptible people. This also implies that obesity may not be a disorder, but rather a normal response to the prevailing dietary environment in affluent nations.

A second study by Dr. Michel Cabanac in 1976 confirmed that reducing food reward (by feeding bland food) lowers the fat mass setpoint in humans, using a clever method that I won't discuss for the sake of brevity (4). I learned about both of these studies through the writing of Dr. Seth Roberts, author of The Shangri-La Diet. I'd also like to thank Dr. Stephen Benoit, a researcher in the food reward field, for talking through these ideas with me to make sure I wasn't misinterpreting them.

I'd like to briefly remark that there's an anatomical basis for the idea of two-way communication between brain regions that determine reward and those that control body fatness. It's well known that the latter influence the former (think about your drive to obtain food after you've just eaten a big meal vs. after you've skipped a meal), but there are also connections from the former to the latter via a brain region called the lateral hypothalamus. The point is that it's anatomically plausible that food reward determines in part the amount of body fat a person carries.

Some people may be inclined to think "well, if food tastes bad, you eat less of it; so what!" Although that may be true to some extent, I don't think it can explain the fact that bland diets affect the calorie intake of lean and obese people differently. To me, that implies that highly rewarding food increases the body fat setpoint in susceptible people, and that food with few rewarding properties allows them to return to a leaner state.

In the next few posts, I'll describe how food reward explains the effectiveness of many popular fat loss diets, I'll describe how this hypothesis fits in with the diets and health of non-industrial cultures, and I'll outline new dietary strategies for preventing and treating obesity and certain forms of metabolic dysfunction.

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

Healthy Spirits: New Arrivals

1. DFH Hellhound On My Ale-due to limited quantities, this is limit 2 per customer. Only Beer of the Month Club members may reserve bottles. Everyone else can buy them off the shelf.

2. Magic Hat #9 22oz

3. Uinta Sum'R Organic Ale 6pk

4. Lost Abbey Devotion

5. Wells Bombardier Ale/glassware

6. Weihenstephaner .5L Weissbier glasses

7.Crispin "The Saint" Cider

8. Widmer Nelson IPA

9. Firestone Walker Solace


cheers,

dave hauslein
beer manager
415-255-0610

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Olde York Street Fair

Watch for Healthy World Cafe at the Olde York Street Fair this Sunday, May 8.  The fair's hours are 12:30 - 6 pm, along Market St. downtown.  HWC will have an informational booth where we'll be telling everyone about HWC, handing out brochures, information, and SEEDS!

If you're planting your garden, and we hope you are - pick up some vegetable seeds at our booth along the 200 block of E. Market St. 

Look for us on Sunday!

Thursday, April 28, 2011

Food Reward: a Dominant Factor in Obesity, Part I

A Curious Finding

It all started with one little sentence buried in a paper about obese rats. I was reading about how rats become obese when they're given chocolate Ensure, the "meal replacement drink", when I came across this:
...neither [obesity-prone] nor [obesity-resistant] rats will overeat on either vanilla- or strawberry-flavored Ensure.
The only meaningful difference between chocolate, vanilla and strawberry Ensure is the flavor, yet rats eating the chocolate variety overate, rapidly gained fat and became metabolically ill, while rats eating the other flavors didn't (1). Furthermore, the study suggested that the food's flavor determined, in part, what amount of fatness the rats' bodies "defended."

As I explained in previous posts, the human (and rodent) brain regulates the amount of fat the body carries, in a manner similar to how the brain regulates blood pressure, body temperature, blood oxygenation and blood pH (2). That fact, in addition to several other lines of evidence, suggests that obesity probably results from a change in this regulatory system. I refer to the amount of body fat that the brain defends as the "body fat setpoint", however it's clear that the setpoint is dependent on diet and lifestyle factors. The implication of this paper that I could not escape is that a food's flavor influences body fatness and probably the body fat setpoint.

An Introduction to Food Reward

The brain contains a sophisticated system that assigns a value judgment to everything we experience, integrating a vast amount of information into a one-dimensional rating system that labels things from awesome to terrible. This is the system that decides whether we should seek out a particular experience, or avoid it. For example, if you burn yourself each time you touch the burner on your stove, your brain will label that action as bad and it will discourage you from touching it again. On the other hand, if you feel good every time you're cold and put on a sweater, your brain will encourage that behavior. In the psychology literature, this phenomenon is called "reward," and it's critical to survival.

The brain assigns reward to, and seeks out, experiences that it perceives as positive, and discourages behaviors that it views as threatening. Drugs of abuse plug directly into reward pathways, bypassing the external routes that would typically trigger reward. Although this system has been studied most in the context of drug addiction, it evolved to deal with natural environmental stimuli, not drugs.

As food is one of the most important elements of survival, the brain's reward system is highly attuned to food's rewarding properties. The brain uses input from smell, taste, touch, social cues, and numerous signals from the digestive tract* to assign a reward value to foods. Experiments in rats and humans have outlined some of the qualities of food that are inherently rewarding:
  • Fat
  • Starch
  • Sugar
  • Salt
  • Meatiness (glutamate)
  • The absence of bitterness
  • Certain textures (e.g., soft or liquid calories, crunchy foods)
  • Certain aromas (e.g., esters found in many fruits)
  • Calorie density ("heavy" food)
We are generally born liking the qualities listed above, and aromas and flavors that are associated with these qualities become rewarding over time. For example, beer tastes terrible the first time you drink it because it's bitter, but after you drink it a few times and your brain catches wind that there are calories and a drug in there, it often begins tasting good. The same applies to many vegetables. Children are generally not fond of vegetables, but if you serve them spinach smothered in butter enough times, they'll learn to like it by the time they're adults.

The human brain evolved to deal with a certain range of rewarding experiences. It didn't evolve to constructively manage strong drugs of abuse such as heroin and crack cocaine, which overstimulate reward pathways, leading to the pathological drug seeking behaviors that characterize addiction. These drugs are "superstimuli" that exceed our reward system's normal operating parameters. Over the next few posts, I'll try to convince you that in a similar manner, industrially processed food, which has been professionally crafted to maximize its rewarding properties, is a superstimulus that exceeds the brain's normal operating parameters, leading to an increase in body fatness and other negative consequences.


* Nerves measure stomach distension. A number of of gut-derived paracrine and endocrine signals, including CCK, PYY, ghrelin, GLP-1 and many others potentially participate in food reward sensing, some by acting directly on the brain via the circulation, and others by signaling indirectly via the vagus nerve. More on this later.

Twitter Delicious Facebook Digg Stumbleupon Favorites More